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Edmonton Oilers 2023-24 player review: Ryan McLeod
Edmonton Oilers Ryan McLeod Cody Ceci Bob Frid-USA TODAY Sports

Welcome to my annual player review series, where I dive into the Edmonton Oilers season player-by-player. We’ll look back at the season that was, what kind of impact each player had, and what we could see from them next season. You can read about the analytics behind my analysis here.


Via The Nation Network

Much like with Warren Foegele, who I wrote about days ago, Ryan McLeod is another player whose time with the Oilers has come and gone.

Drafted by the team in the second round of the 2018 draft, it didn’t take him long to establish himself as a legit prospect for the team. He broke into the NHL in 2021-22, improving in ways each season.

Ultimately, however, an inability to capitalize when it matters most was his downfall. McLeod enjoyed a solid 2023-24 season, setting career highs in goals, assists and points, with 12, 18 and 30, respectively, while playing key defensive roles for the team. Most of his production came in times when he was elevated up the lineup alongside Leon Draisaitl, and his biggest knock was, quite simply, his inability to produce offence otherwise.

Of his 26 5v5 points this year, 11 of them came alongside Draisaitl in 186 minutes, with the German being his fifth most common linemate, for a 3.5 points per hour rate. McLeod’s rate away from Draisaitl? 1.1.

There are tons of positives to what McLeod brought, however. The Oilers consistently controlled the shot attempt share, scoring chance share, expected goal share and most importantly, the actual goal share, all while playing limited minutes alongside either Draisaitl or Connor McDavid. That’s been a serious point of content for the Oilers depth players in the past, but was a trend McLeod helped — in a big way — buck.

McLeod’s on-ice contributions were significant, so much so that hockeyviz.com has them at that of a high-end first line player. He provided offence at a 10 percent rate above league average, defence at a nine percent ate above league average, and work on the penalty kill at a seven percent rate above league average. These are all very impressive numbers, but it doesn’t overshadow his inability to get to the blue paint in the offensive zone, or the fact he had just four points, all goals, in 24 playoff games for the Oilers this year.

Edmonton ultimately traded him this offseason to the Buffalo Sabres in exchange for Matthew Savoie, who has instantly become the Oilers’ top prospect. It was a smart move by the Oilers to get younger, cheaper, and refill the prospect cupboard, but I’m still concerned, at least in the short-term, about the bottom-six and the penalty kill sans McLeod.

It will be on some other players, namely Adam Henrique, to step up this season.

RYAN MCLEOD’S CAREER SO FAR

Season Team Lge GP G A Pts PIM +/- GP G A Pts PIM

Regular Season Playoffs
2014-15 Oakville Blades OJHL 2 0 0 0 0
2015-16 Mississauga Steelheads OHL 62 7 13 20 16 -6 7 0 2 2 2
2016-17 Mississauga Steelheads OHL 68 9 33 42 36 12 20 5 15 20 2
2017-18 Mississauga Steelheads OHL 68 26 44 70 26 -2 6 2 3 5 6
2018-19 Mississauga Steelheads OHL 32 12 26 38 17 -12
2018-19 Bakersfield Condors AHL 5 0 3 3 0
2018-19 Saginaw Spirit OHL 31 7 17 24 16 18 17 5 7 12 4
2019-20 Bakersfield Condors AHL 56 5 18 23 22 0




2020-21 Zug EV Swiss-A 15 4 7 11 10 3
2020-21 Bakersfield Condors AHL 28 14 14 28 10 23
2020-21 Edmonton Oilers NHL 10 0 1 1 0 -2 4 0 0 0 0
2021-22 Edmonton Oilers NHL 71 9 12 21 12 -2 16 3 1 4 8
2021-22 Bakersfield Condors AHL 7 1 4 5 6 -2
2022-23 Edmonton Oilers NHL 57 11 12 23 18 4 12 0 5 5 2
2023-24 Edmonton Oilers NHL 81 12 18 30 10 10 24 4 0 4 16

NHL Totals
219 32 43 75 40
56 7 6 13 26

PLAYERS REVIEWED SO FAR

This article first appeared on Oilersnation and was syndicated with permission.

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